VoIP Insider

Yamaha USB Conference Speakerphones

Growing up in Northwestern Pennsylvania the first I knew of Yamaha was their snowmobiles, motorbikes and boats. A lot of the kids I went to school with spent their winters and/or summers riding some combination of one or all of them. Later on in high school as a lot of my friends started bands I started to associate the name with drum kits and guitars.

For many years all I knew of Yamaha was their motor vehicles and musical instrument but since working at VoIP Supply I’ve gotten to know a different set of their products, USB conference speakerphones.

Yamaha USB Conference Speakerphones

Yamaha currently offers three different USB Conference Speakerphones with each of them targeted at a different use scenario.

Yamaha PJP-10UR

The Yamaha PJP-10UR is compact speakerphone that is designed for desktop and personal conference phones. The PJP-10UR has an optimal microphone range of 1.5 feet. This range combined with the sturdy aluminum body, light weight and included cloth storage bag make it a good match for road warriors.

Microphones – 4

Speakers – 2

Pick up Range – 5ft Max 10ft

Max Volume – 80db

Adaptive Echo Canceller

Noise Reduction

Yamaha PJP-20UR

For voice and video calls in larger offices and small conference rooms the Yamaha PJP-20UR is a great solution. The USB powered PJP-20UR features easy plug-n-play setup and features dedicated keys for volume control and LED lights for microphone mute status.

Microphones – 3

Speakers – 1

Pick up Range – 1.5ft Max 3.25ft

Max Volume – 85db

Adaptive Echo Canceller

Noise Reduction

Supports RoHS

Yamaha PJP-50USB

The third of the Yamaha speakerphones is the Yamaha PJP-50USB which is designed to be used in conference rooms. Like the other two speakerphones the PJP-50USB is USB powered and features easy plug-n-play set up. The phone can cover a range of up to 32 feet and for larger rooms you can daisy chain 4 units together for greater coverage.

Discussion

Studying music & broadcasting while in College I also came to know Yamaha for musical instruments and professional audio gear. Much later I had the pleasure to trying their little PSG-01s. I described that experience here: